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Rev. Dr. Justin Sabia-Tanis to Be Appointed Inaugural Occupant of the Wilson Yates Chair in Theology and the Arts

Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, June 5, 2026 — United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities is elated to announce that Rev. Dr. Justin Sabia-Tanis will be appointed as the first-ever occupant of the Wilson Yates Chair in Theology and the Arts. Until now, he has served faithfully as the McVay Associate Professor of Christian Ethics and Social Transformation, as well as Director of the Social Transformation Program. Before joining United, Rev. Dr. Sabia-Tanis served as a congregational minister in Boston, Honolulu, and San Francisco, and was Director of Leadership Development for Metropolitan Community Churches, after which he joined the United Church of Christ (UCC). Rev. Dr. Sabia-Tanis’ ministry includes community organizing and advocacy. He has served as managing director at the Center for LGBTQ and Gender Studies in Religion (CLGS) as well as communications director for the Hawai’i Equal Rights Marriage Project, the National Center for Transgender Equality, and Out & Equal Workplace Advocates. He received his PhD in Interdisciplinary Studies from Graduate Theological Union in 2017, his DMin from San Francisco Theological Seminary in 2003, and his MDiv from Harvard Divinity School in 1990. His teaching experience spans courses at the University of Arizona, Pima Community College, Iliff School of Theology, and Pacific School of Religion. As an eminent academic and theologian, Dr. Sabia-Tanis’ scholarship has deepened the study of the intersection of art and LGBTQ+ religious identity. He recently completed writing Queer Spirituality, Sexual Orientation, and Gender Identity in Contemporary Visual Art, to be released later this year by Bloomsbury Academic. Dr. Sabia-Tanis also wrote the groundbreaking book Transgendered Ministry, Theology and Communities of Faith (Cleveland: Pilgrim Press, 2003; Wipf & Stock, 2018) and authored a chapter in Transbiblical: New Approaches to Interpretation and Embodiment in Scripture (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2025).  In 2024, he gave a lecture in the art gallery of Hennepin Avenue United Methodist Church in Minneapolis, MN, on the life and art of Keith Haring. Dr. Sabia-Tanis is himself an artist, and he hones and cultivates the creative expression of the artist-theologians enrolled in his courses. In his announcement of the news to United students, Dr. Kyle Roberts—Dean and Vice President for Academic Affairs—connected Rev. Dr. Sabia-Tanis’ education and qualifications to the field of theology and the arts. “Dr. Sabia-Tanis appreciates and champions the legacy of Dr. Yates and the leadership of United in the area of arts and theology,” Dr. Roberts asserted. “He also advocates for the intersection of the arts with movements for social justice and will bring to his teaching and leadership a synergy of theology and arts, along with his contributions to the education of social transformation at United.” Rev. Dr. Molly T. Marshall, President, commended the news for this esteemed member of the faculty. “The wide-ranging scholarship of Dr. Justin Sabia-Tanis will elevate this position as the arts serve as a medium for social transformation.” Established in 2025 by generous gifts from friends, alums, and former United faculty, the Wilson Yates Chair in Theology and the Arts is an endowed faculty position named after Rev. Dr. Wilson Yates, President Emeritus and Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Religion, Society, and the Arts. Yates joined United’s faculty in 1967, became Dean in 1988, and was made President in 1996. He retired from the seminary in 2005, having led and innovated in theology and the arts, deepened scholarship, and integrated the subject as a pillar of United’s academic programs. Rev. Dr. Yates celebrated the news and is eager to see Rev. Dr. Sabia-Tanis installed into the chair. He reflects, “I am very excited about Justin’s selection for this role. His studies at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley will provide an important background to this work. Justin brings a solid understanding of the relationship to the arts in theology, the church, and everyday life. It is not incidental that he is also a practicing artist.” On his appointment to the chair, Rev. Dr. Sabia-Tanis shares, “United has valued and integrated the arts since our founding. They are critical to how our students are formed, and in the ministries and projects they will lead when they graduate. I am so honored to move into this important role at United and continue the incredible legacy of Wilson Yates. And I'm looking forward to the ways this program will evolve and grow in the coming years.” The installation of Dr. Sabia-Tanis into the Wilson Yates Chair in Theology and the Arts will be formally celebrated at Fall Convocation on Thursday, September 24, 2026. Details will be announced in the coming months. About United Founded by the United Church of Christ (UCC) as a welcoming, ecumenical school that embraces all denominations and faith traditions, United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities has been on the creative edge of progressive theological thought and leadership since it was established in 1962. Today, United continues to educate leaders who, through the eyes of faith, engage in the dismantling of systems of oppression, exploring multi-faith spirituality, and pushing the boundaries of knowledge. Contact Nathanial Green (he/him) Director of Marketing and Communications press@unitedseminary.edu • 651.255.6138 Admissions and Enrollment admissions@unitedseminary.edu

Queer Ancestors, Holy Pride: A Community Arts Collage

On June 22, 2021, students, alumni, and friends of United got together for a special Pride arts lunch, where we created a community arts collage around the theme of queer ancestry, pride, and lgbtq+ iconography. The Following Pride flag is inspired by Daniel Quasar's Progress: Pride Flag Reboot, which brings together Gilbert Baker's original design with Tierney's inclusive Pride Flag (which incorporates black and brown strips in honor of black and other POC members of the LGBTQ community) and Seattle LGBTQ Commission's flag (which includes the pink, white and blue of the transgender flag).  (more…)

Is Star Wars a Religion? with Dr. Robyn Walsh

Every Tuesday, United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities's Arts Program hosts "Arts Lunch," an opportunity for United community members to come together for a variety of workshops, presentations, and conversations at the intersection of Theology and the Arts. For this special May the 4th arts lunch, guest speaker Robyn Walsh talked about her work on the age-old question: Is Star Wars a Religion? In public articles, her podcast, and in the course she teaches at the University of Miami, Dr. Walsh has explored everything from Jediism as an ascetic practice, the Force as Pneuma, fandom and religiosity, and Star Wars and myth. (more…)

Teaching the Flag: A Judeo-Pagan, Radical Faerie Prayer for Pride.

The following prayer/liturgical reading is by local artist, educator, former United staff member, and 2020 alum Max Yeshaye Brumberg-Kraus. It is inspired by Gilbert Baker's original rainbow flag design for Pride. As an artist-theologian, Brumberg-Kraus holds multiple religious belonging including the gay pagan movement of the Radical Faeries, Judaism, and interfaith queer/trans theologies. If this is a prayer that speaks to you or your community, the author is happy for you to use it, with attribution. "All human beings need symbols. All human beings use symbols, and we need a symbol the way other countries, movements, peoples need a symbol to identify us, to show solidarity with each other, and to proclaim our presence."– Gilbert Baker, designer of the original rainbow Pride Flag. One asks, what is the meaning of Pink? We answer: Pink is sex, loving the other, Eros, two-sexed Protogonos, the egg, the ebb of philia and flow of neikos, the double helix of Netzah and Hod, the generative force bridging all opposites and revealing that opposites are illusory. One asks, what is the meaning of Red? We answer: Red is life. Red is Gaia shaping ha adam out of her side, lifeblood and the fight to sustain it, Innana love-in-action crying for freedom, judging of the death-dealing cult of sexual and spiritual repression. It is Gevurah and Din. One asks, what is the meaning of Orange? We answer: Orange is healing, it is the Balm of Gilead which Sheba gifted Solomon, it is Aesclepius and his rod, it Yesod and Yggdrasil, the channel for life's stream, the tree's long body, and the phallic symbol of rejuvenation. One asks, what is the meaning of Yellow? We answer: Yellow is Sun. It is David’s harp and Apollo’s countenance, Shamash and generous Chesed, the heat that stirs the flow of sap, the mango in the monkey's palm who jumped from earth to the sky and back. Yellow is above, separate but reachable, holy but humanistic, our sustenance from above. One asks, what is the meaning of Green? We answer: Green is nature, terrible and beautiful. Demeter of harvests and famines; Snake Skirted Coatlique pregnant with our gods; lightning-eyed Pan/Cernunnos, howling in the mountain; half-beast Enkidu ambivalent toward society; twice-born Dionysus, who gifts wisdom and madness equally from the wine-dripping tip of this thyrsus, and Binah the womb of deep discernment. Green is the many and monstrous rejecting the unnatural uniformity of straight society, the yoni yielding pandemonium, the internal, insight beyond rigid morality, our sustenance from below. Green will devour us, if we cannot love this planet and protect it. One asks, what is the meaning of Turquoise? We answer: Turquoise is magic and art, the caduceus and the paintbrush, theatre and theory, lavish drag and priestly robes, Thoth and the Abyssinian muses, thrice-great Hokhma, realm of inspiration, queer myth-makers speaking our existence across time and space, secret knowledge passed mouth to ear, record to record, heart to heart. One asks, what is the meaning of Blue? We answer: Blue is serenity, the foot and the mouth, She Who Is sovereign in her body and in the land, matter constantly dancing, transubstantial and transgender, fully present: Shekhina. One asks, what is the meaning of Purple? We answer. Purple is spirit. They are beautiful, they are sacred books, they are the bed of myth whence we all rise, symbols, and the dove. They are the breath which flows between all colors, all shapes, all worlds. One asks, what holds the colors line by line? What binds them all together? We answer: When purple seems to end, we circle back to the majesty of all the colors, where all and none become indistinguishable, for the nothingness that is everything, the ever-present invisible. A queer connectivity threads the universe, that part of cosmos which loves, heals, transforms, and take pride in itself. Pride is the memory of Keter, that hiddenmost crown, which was the first to stir in all that is holy. It is the dream of the world and what the world can be. That is what holds the colors and binds them all together. Communion and disintegration, diversity and unity, held in balance by a conscious cosmos who beams with pride: Ehyeh asher ehyeh– I am!

“We call for an immediate ceasefire:” Palestine, Israel, and the Complicity of U.S. Christianity.

The escalating violence within the states of Israel and Palestine fills us with deep grief and concern. We deplore the loss of life, especially the deaths of children, and the trauma that this situation is causing. We also recognize that while both sides are engaging in military action, the Palestinian people have borne a far heavier burden of death and injury, on top of ongoing poverty and devastation. This continuing cycle of bloodshed and the violation of basic human rights not only fails to resolve millennia-old conflicts but, in fact, plants seeds for potential future acts of retaliation and ongoing hostilities.  (more…)